Security thread — anchored on today's run (June 16)
We run a security pass on Soladrome every single day.
Today's pulled the biggest DeFi hacks of the past weeks — Raydium, Drift, Cetus — and threw every one at our own code.
Here's what came back.
We won't tell you Soladrome "can't be hacked." The people who say that are the ones to worry about.
What we'll tell you: we never stop looking. No audit is final, so we treat security as a daily habit, not a milestone.
@scoliosispotus That's what i also think and why we built it but it seems few get it. It takes time, as we are new in the space. We keep building anyway.
The Soladrome Token Bridge: Unlocking the Ultimate Cross-Chain Liquidity Superhighway
Imagine taking the absolute powerhouses of EVM liquidity—Aerodrome ($AERO) and Velodrome ($VELO)—and injecting their DNA directly into the hyper-fast Solana ecosystem.
@F3moral The bribe bridge is on testnet. It will be shipped at lSoladrome mainnet launch. This will enables all Ve3.3 protocols liquidity and incentives to expand cross-chain. This could trigger a massive shift for DEFI.
That flips the usual risk. On most tokens: upside is hyped, downside is unlimited. On SOLA: upside is open (the curve), downside is mathematically bounded at the floor. You always know the worst case before you enter.
Selling is where it matters. When you sell, you don't fight a bonding curve or eat slippage. You burn 1 SOLA → redeem 1 USDC from the floor vault. Flat. No curve impact. No matter how many people are selling at the same time.
That backing isn't a promise. It's not a treasury someone "manages." It's a vault the contract controls, and the only way USDC leaves it is when you redeem SOLA against it. The floor can't be spent, borrowed away, or rugged.
Every time someone buys SOLA, the USDC splits in two: → An amount equal to the tokens minted goes into the floor vault, 1:1. → The excess goes to the market vault. So every SOLA in existence is backed by exactly 1 USDC sitting in the floor reserve.
Most tokens have one thing in common: they can go to zero. SOLA can't. Not "shouldn't" — can't, by design. Here's the mechanism that puts a hard floor under every single token.